Mohammad
Nurul Huda’s Novels
Mohammad Nurul Huda (b 1949) is one of the major poets
of Bangladesh. And resultantly more than thirty-five
volumes of poetry of him want to eliminate his poetic
genius only. Excluding them he has edited a good
number of books, and written some five volumes of
essays. He is also a well-known translator of the
country - in both Bangla to English and vice verse his
pen wanders. He has written about five books in
English language also. He is a researcher on folk
literature as well as on Kazi Nazrul Islam. But today
our attention is to his fiction only where he has
roamed a life, which demonstrates a huge novelty
before our readership.
Mohammad Nurul Huda has written only two novels:
Janmajati (Birthrace, 1994) and Moinpahar
(After the name of a hill, 1995) but astonishingly
both these two reveal before us a life quite unknown
to most of the inhabitants of Bangla-language region.
The novelist depicts the nature and life of Cox’s
Bazaar in them. Moinpahar and the Bay of Bengal are
the two main characters (or ingredients) of the books.
Nurul Huda has told his stories that are inseparably
intermingled with those natural phenomena. Hills and
the waters are artistically portrayed in Nurul Huda’s
fiction. In this regard we must mention that the
depiction of these natural components has not
belittled his books as something regional, rather they
have come out of the regional boundaries - as Thomas
Hardy or William Faulkner’s most of the novels are not
regional though they are set at Wassex and
Mississippi.
It is undeniably true that Moinpahar is mostly
centred round Kishore but what about Janmajati?
Kishore of Mainpahar is also present in
Janmajati though not as hugely as it was in
Mainpahar. There are other important characters
like Ramanidas in Janmajati and in both the
novels the role of Sonabibi is very significant. But
we cannot deny that the most noticeable characters in
Huda’s novels are the hills, the rivers along with the
Bay of Bengal i.e. the whole landscape of Cox’s
Bazaar.
Janmajati open with Ramanidas, the peon of
Lusai
Primary School.
His skin is as black as the Negro soldiers who fought
in favour of the British in the Japan-British War
during 1943-1944. In their first days they did not mix
with the local people but gradually their hunger
compelled them to do otherwise. Moreover, the hunger
of the belly could be satiated somehow but what about
the hunger of sex! The Negro soldiers wanted bodies to
gratify their physical desires - thus the ‘Jhikjhik’
practice started. The ‘Jhikjhiks’ would run after the
army lorries whenever they saw and Ramanidas himself
was one of them. One day while doing so, he met an
accident and thus received a permanent limp in his
left leg but most horribly what happened is he became
sexually disabled. From thence onward Ramanidas is the
peon of the government primary school.
Who is or are observing all these past histories and
present incidents? - They are Anu, the first person
narrator, Surya i.e. Suruj Ali Shikder and Pakhi. They
hear and see many things that are compiled in the
book. But the question is about the existence of the
novelist himself among the narrators. In this regard,
we must say that in Moinpahar there is no such
narrator; the omniscient writer himself narrates all
the stories of the novel - through sometimes he does
it in the second hand style.
In Janmajati, after the short episode of
Ramanidas, there emerge other episodes of
Khubsuratbibi, Amir Moulavi etc. After the closure of
the school the three school fellows start for their
home, northwards, and on their why they come across
them. The story of Khubsurabibi is a very tragic one.
Immediately after her marriage, the husband Sadakot
wanted to visit Rangoon - as everyone of the locality
would do to try his luck. Sadakot also went and never
he came back. After Sadakot’s missing, every kith and
kin of the old woman passed away one after another and
now she stands alone in the life’s hell of agony.
People talk differently about Sadakot’s missing - some
say, he has gone across the ocean, some comment that
he has been killed by the Japanese, some also say that
he has married another woman in Rangoon - but
Khulsuratbibi does not lose her hope. She protects the
production of Sadakot - one, the daughter Gulbadan who
died when cholera broke out in the village; and the
other the orchard of Arhar pulse which the naughty
school going children always try to damage.
Next comes the story of Amir Moulavi - one through
whom comes both the story of Sonabibi also and later
on we see that Sonabibi herself is a story-teller to
the little kids. Sonabibi, the kids’ Sonafufu, once
burnt the beard of a Kabuliala who went to the moulavi
and told everything. It angered Amir Moulavi so much
that he decided to oust the woman from the village by
giving a Fotwa. On that very day the Moulavi was
suffering from dysentery - he had to use the toilet
very often and with her herbal medication Sonabibi
cured the Moulavi immediately. The whole evening the
woman remains outside the Moulavi’s house and at some
time it became dusky. Moulavi gets moved and they two
rush to a far away lonely place where they get
entangled. Poet Nurul Huda has described this scene in
a very poetic way. The whole incident takes a very
symbolic and allegorical delineation from where the
author reaches the philosophical climax - through
physical copulation he sees the transplantation of the
souls also.
Both Sonabibi and Kishore are enormously present both
in Janmajati and Moinpahar unlike
Ramanida whom we do not get in the second one. To any
reader of these two novels, it may seem Janmajati
is a context is which Kishore is set and in
Moinpahar he is developed.
Three aspects of Kishore’s life are mainly illustrated
in Janmajati. His love for the hills and the
waters that is the landscape of Cox’s Bazaar is
worthwhile to notice. He is in love with the nature
that surrounds him. Moreover the century old stories
and legends are also a great attraction for him. We
hear those mostly from Sonabibi. In her story the
story of the first men on earth i.e. the Lanka-men are
narrated - where Yajuj and Majus’ story is
intermingled. The other feature of the book is the
folk songs by Barketa Gain. Scorers of Gain’s songs
are found in the book as they are found in the
everyday life of the people of Cox’s Bazaar. We do get
the mystic songs of Lalon also. Thus the novelist
shows us the formation of the characteristic of
Kishore’s mind that is elaborately exhibited in the
second novel. The night when missing his father
Kishore returns from Badarkhali alone, he sees his
mother Firuza in the arms of Monnu - a friend of
Kishore - and he changes the direction and occupation
of his life. The spectacle haunts him, but it also
provokes him to have a glance. Thus the innocence of
Kishore is shattered.
Kishore is present from the very beginning of
Moinpahar. Here his sexual development is minutely
portrayed. In Janmajati, he observes others’
relations but in Moinpahar he himself makes
that relation. One day Thambhu came - Thambhu a girl
of fourteen came with her grandmother to
Chadaizzarghat to buy fishes. Thambhu’s physical
stature drew Kishore’s attention. He got physically
moved. Her breasts seemed to Kishore as the pair of
hill-peaks. After the disappearance of Thambhu,
Kishore enters into the awning where his assistant
Chhalu was sleeping. Kishore lies on Chhalu and tries
to reach the conclusion that a male body can also
satisfy. It is undoubtedly brevity for Nurul Huda to
show this sodomy in his fiction. In this regard it is
worthy to mention that we get a picture of bestiality
in Moinpahar also.
The culmination of his sexual exposition reaches its
peach when he meets Sonabibi after being beaten by the
two unknown cow-lifters. When he comes near her house
she feels the existence of another man there. He keeps
aloof and after some time Amir Moulavi comes out of
Sonabibi’s hut. Sonabibi realizes that her relation
with Amir is known to Kishore and so when Kishore
comes, she makes a plot and thus make physical
attachment with her.
At the end of the novel, we can realize that Sonabibi
herself may have some relationship with the cow
lifters. Moreover, it is also known that Firuza’s
second husband Monnu also may have some involvement in
the illegal trades. In search of the cow lifters
Kishore once goes to the Arshibibi who can show the
whereabouts of the missing property in the mirror.
There Arshibibi tells Kishore a story. In Janmajati
Sonabibi tells the story of the first man at the end
of the book. Arshibibi’s story is about Moinkumari.
Thus we observe that in both the novels Nurul Huda
creates a special milieu for which he has intermingled
legendary stories of Cox’s Bazaar. Those stories are
associated with the life style of the people of the
locality. They upheld the heritage and history of
Cox’s Bazaar. Probably the number of fiction in which
that life has been pictured is not many. Nurul Huda
has done this work with necessary care and expected
skill and thus his novels pose as something worthy to
mention in the horizon of the novels of Bangladesh.